First Look

When Douglas introduced the Devastator into the US Navy's carrier air groups in 1937, they had created the blueprint for future naval aviation. The aircraft was the first monoplane to go to sea. With the exception of the flight control surfaces, the aircraft was all-metal in construction. Most importantly, the wings could be folded to facilitate dense parking on the limited real estate of the flight deck or in the hangar deck.

As war loomed on the horizon, the Navy was looking at options for deploying airpower into island regions with no airfields nor aircraft carriers for staging conventional aircraft. One TBD-1 was modified with a pair of Edo floats to test its ability to operate as a floatplane torpedo bomber in 1939. While test photos showed the aircraft in flight test, it was safe to say that the Navy didn't adopt the concept.

Great Wall Hobby has returned with another installment in the TBD Devastator series. This kit is their latest aviation subject and once again the 'wow' factor is there. I remember when Great Wall Hobbies first announced the TBD-1 Devastator. Up to that point, they had been focused on producing variants of two other long-overdue subjects, the Focke Wulf Fw 189 and the Northrop P-61 Black Widow. In both cases these kits are the best of their respective subjects in any scale (to date). With the TBD Devastator, our only option has been the venerable Monogram kit and that release is still very nice (for its age). Let's take a look at this latest subject:

The kit is moded in light gray styrene and presented on five parts trees plus one tree of clear parts and two frets of photo-etched details.

Some of the features/options in this kit:

Three very detailed cockpits

Seat belts/shoulder harnesses provided as photo-etched parts

Radio equipment nicely done

Detailed bombardier/torpedoman positions

.50 caliber rear gun ring installation

Canopies can be positioned open or closed

One-piece canopy provided for completely closed option

Observation/aiming doors are positionable

Detailed Twin Wasp engine

Choice of open or closed cowl flaps

Wings can be posed folded or extended

Flaps can be posed extended or closed

One set of new-tooled Edo floats

Ventral belly pan options for plain torpedo cradle

Centerline torpedo armament

Canopy paint masks are included

Most of the detailing is finely scribed with exception of the raised ribbing on the wing surfaces. With aircraft of this generation, this is where raised rivets would be the norm. The fabric-covered flight control surfaces are nicely done.

With all of the nice details and options in the box, the kit isn't over-engineered and should be a straightforward build. The inclusion of the canopy paint masks is a major plus as I'd lose my will to live if I had to mask each of those windows individually (the old-fashioned way).

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